Thomas Morton (colonist)

Thomas Morton (c. 1579–1647) was an early American colonist from Devon, England. A lawyer, writer and social reformer, he was famed for founding the British colony of Merrymount, which was located in what is now Quincy, Massachusetts, and for his work studying Native American culture.

Thomas Morton was born in Devon, England in 1579, into a conservative Anglican family of the Devon gentry. Devon at that time was considered the "dark corner of the land" by Protestant reformers, due to its traditionalist intransigence, which included not only a High ChurchAnglicanism, that shared many traits with Catholicism, but also a paternalistic populism combined with rural folk tradition that, for the Puritans, came close to paganism. To the local inhabitants, however, it was merely "Old England" — this culture was firmly ingrained in him.[citation needed]

The early years of the 17th century saw Morton traveling between London and the Devonshire countryside as the legal champion of displaced countrymen "whose economic straits filled new tent-cities, furnished prisons and gallows, and pushed Devon men to the Bristol sea-trades"[citation needed]. He eventually settled into the service of Ferdinando Gorges, the governor of the English port of Plymouth and a major colonial entrepreneur. Gorges, who was an associate of Sir Walter Raleigh and had been part of Robert Devereux's Essex Conspiracy, was heavily involved in the "permissive" economy of the seas, and with many interests in New England was to become the founder of the colony of Maine. Morton initially served him in a legal capacity in England, but following failed marriage plans in 1618 (due to the influence of a Puritan stepson) he decided to become one of Gorges' "landsmen" to oversee his interests in the colonies. Neither experience would enamor him of the Puritans.

Morton spent three months on an exploratory trip to America in 1622, but was back in England by early 1623 complaining of the intolerance of certain elements of the Puritan community. He returned in 1624 as a senior partner in a Crown-sponsored trading venture, on board the ship the Unity with his associate Captain Wollaston and 30 indentured young men. They settled and began trading for furs on a spit of land given to them by the native Algonquian tribes, whose culture Morton is said to have admired as far more "civilized and humanitarian" than that of his "intolerant European neighbours". [sic][citation needed] The Pilgrim separatists of the New England Plymouth Colony objected to their sales of guns and liquor to the natives in exchange for furs and provisions, which at that time was technically illegal (although almost everyone was doing it).[1] The weapons undoubtedly acquired by the Algonquians were used to defend themselves against raids from the northern tribes, however, and not against the fearful colonists. The trading post set up by the two men soon expanded into an agrarian colony which became known as Mount Wollaston (now Quincy, Massachusetts).

Morton fell out with Wollaston after he discovered that Wollaston had been selling indentured servants into slavery on the Virginian tobacco plantations. Powerless to prevent him, he encouraged the remaining servants to rebel against his harsh rule and organise themselves into a free community. Wollaston fled with his supporters to Virginia in 1626, leaving Morton in sole command of the colony, or its "host" as he preferred to be called, which was renamed Mount Ma-re (a play on "merry" and "the sea") or simply Merrymount. Under Morton's "hostship", an almost utopian project was embarked upon, in which the colonists were declared free men or "consociates", and a certain degree of integration into the local Algonquian culture was attempted. However, it was Morton's long-term plan to "further civilize" the native population by converting them to his liberal form of Christianity, and by providing them with free salt for food preservation, thus enabling them to give up hunting and settle permanently. He also considered himself a "loyal subject" of the British monarchy throughout this period, and his agenda remained a colonial one, referring to book three of his New English Canaan memoirs as a manual on "how not to colonize" — in reference to the Puritans.

Morton's religious beliefs were strongly condemned by the Puritans of the nearby Plymouth Colony as little more than a thinly disguised form of heathenism, and they suspected him of "going native". Scandalous rumours spread of debauchery at Merrymount, which they claimed included immoral sexual liaisons with native women during what amounted to drunken orgies in honour of Bacchus and Aphrodite, or as the Puritan Governor William Bradford wrote in his history Of Plymouth Plantation, "They ... set up a May-pole, drinking and dancing about it many days together, inviting the Indian women for their consorts, dancing and frisking together (like so many fairies, or furies rather) and worse practices. As if they had anew revived & celebrated the feasts of ye Roman Goddess Flora, or ye beastly practices of ye mad Bacchanalians." Morton had transplanted traditional West Country May Day customs to the colony, and combined them with fashionable classical myth, couched according to his own libertine tastes and fueled by the enthusiasm of his newly freed fellow colonists. On a practical level the annual May Day festival was not only a reward for his hardworking colonists but also a joint celebration with the Native Tribes who also marked the day, and a chance for the mostly male colonists to find brides amongst the native population. Puritan ire was no doubt also fueled by the fact that Merrymount was the fastest-growing colony in New England and rapidly becoming the most prosperous, both as an agricultural producer and in the fur trade, in which the Plymouth Colony was trying to build a monopoly. The Puritan account of this was very different, regarding the colony as a decadent nest of good-for-nothings that annually attracted "all the scum of the country" to the area, or as Peter Lamborn Wilson more romantically puts it, "a Comus-crew of disaffected fur traders, antinomians, loose women, Indians and bon-vivants".

The second 1628 Mayday, "Revels of New Canaan", inspired by "Cupid's mother" — with its "pagan odes" to Neptune and Triton (as well as Venus and her lustful children, Cupid, Hymen and Priapus), its drinking song, and its erection of a huge 80-foot (24 m) Maypole, topped with deer antlers, — that proved too much for the "Princes of Limbo", as Morton referred to his Puritan neighbours. The Plymouth militia under Myles Standish took the town the following June with little resistance, chopped down the Maypole and arrested Morton for "supplying guns to the Indians".[2] He was put in stocks in Plymouth, given a trial and finally marooned on the deserted Isles of Shoals, off the coast of New Hampshire, until an "English ship could take him home", as he was believed too well connected to be imprisoned or executed (as later became the penalty for blasphemy in the colony). He was essentially left to starve on the island, but was supplied with food by friendly natives from the mainland, who were said to be bemused by the events, and he eventually gained enough strength to escape to England under his own volition. The Merrymount community survived without Morton for another year, but was renamed Mount Dagon by the Puritans, after the Semitic sea god, and they pledged to make it a place of woe. During the terrible winter famine of 1629 residents of New Salem under John Endecott raided Mount Dagon's plentiful corn supplies and destroyed what was left of the Maypole, denouncing it as a pagan idol and calling it the "Calf of Horeb". Morton returned to the colony soon after and, after finding that most of the inhabitants had been scattered, was rearrested, again put on trial and banished from the colonies. The following year the colony of Mount Dagon was burned to the ground and Morton shipped back to England.

Barely surviving his harsh treatment during his journey into exile, he regained his strength in 1631 and following a short spell in an Essex jail was released and began a lawsuit against the Massachusetts Bay Company, the political power behind the Puritans. To the surprise of the Protestant English supporters of "Plymouther Separatists", Morton won influential backing for his cause and was treated as a champion of liberty. With the help of his original backer Ferdinando Gorges he became the attorney of the Council of New England against the Massachusetts Bay Company. The real political force behind his good fortune, however, was the hostility of Charles I to the Puritan colonists. In 1635, Morton's efforts were successful, and the Company's charter was revoked. Major political rearrangements occurred in New England after this, though these were primarily due to colonial rejection of the court decision, subsequent isolation, lack of supplies and overpopulation, and increased conflict between foreign colonists and natives. Nonetheless, Plymouth became a place of woe, and many left Massachusetts for the relative safety of Connecticut.

In 1637 Morton became a political celebrity with the publication of his three-volume New English Canaan, based on the notes of his legal campaign. Morton produced in these three books an inspired denunciation of Puritan government in the colonies and their policy of land enclosure and near genocide of the Native population, who were described as a far nobler culture, and defined as a Canaan under attack from the "New Israel" of the Puritans. He summed up his magnum opus with a call for the "demartialising" of the colonies and the creation of a multicultural New Canaan along the lines of Merrymount, as well as tantalisingly describing the commercial worth of North America. Ultimately, though, something very different would begin to emerge with the reorganisation of New England and the beginnings of a Triangular Trade that was rooted in slavery.

At this time Gorges was declared the new Governor of the Colonies by King Charles I, though he would never set foot in America. Morton's victory, however, was cut short by the beginning of the English Civil War, which was triggered by reactions to Charles' absolutism as well as agitation from the Puritans. In 1642 Morton planned to flee to New England with Gorges, but when his aged mentor failed to make the trip, he returned alone as Gorges' agent in Maine.

Following an ill-conceived triumphal return to the Plymouth Colony, he was arrested and accused of being a Royalist "agitator", and put on trial for his role in the revocation of the colony's charter, as well as for charges of sedition. By September he was imprisoned in Boston, but his trial was delayed, "so evidence could be sought" through winter, but none ever arrived. As his health began to fail, his petition for clemency and release was granted. Isolated from his English supporters during the English Civil War, he ended his days amidst the West Country planters of Maine, under the protection of Gorges' supporters. He died at the age of 71 in 1647.

In O Brave New World: American Literature from 1600 to 1840, a paperback original "Critical Anthology of American Literature" edited by Leslie A. Fiedler and Arthur Zeiger, the editors include selections on Morton from Morton's and Bradford's accounts in the section "The Heritage of Melancholy". In the section introduction, the editors write: "Side by side with [Puritanism], there was exported [to America] a Cavalier style of life, a blend of English countryside paganism and Gentleman's Christianity that managed to survive for a while in the South . . . but was almost immediately driven out in the colder climate of the do-it-yourself North. . . . Sometimes one wonders what would have happened if it had survived, this beatnik colony in the seventeenth-century New England woods, presided over by university Bohemians—full of classical quotations, rum and deviltry. . . . But the archetypal conflict of Cavalier and Puritan is surely operative, too; and it is this archetypal aspect of the story that has persuaded some critics to treat it as a full-blown myth—one strong and attractive enough in any case to have cued innumerable retellings." [3]

Harrison T. Meserole describes Morton as "America's first rascal".[4] Morton's The New English Canaan has been described as "an important work of early American environmental writing".[5]

Merry Mount is a 1933 opera with libretto written by Richard Stokes and music by Howard Hanson. Based on Hawthorne's story, it premiered in Ann Arbor, Michigan, in 1933 and at the Metropolitan Opera in New York City in 1934. Seldom performed, it was revived in 2014. A suite compiled from the opera by Hanson is available in several recordings.

Morton is a central character in Robert Lowell's play "Endecott and the Red Cross", first published in a trilogy of one-act plays, The Old Glory (1965). Lowell cites Morton's book New Canaan and Hawthorn's story "The Maypole of Merry Mount" as two of his sources for the play.

"The Disturber" by L. S. Davidson Jr., published by Macmillan Company in 1964, is a fictional account of Thomas Morton.